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EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON:- We have here in college a great number of courses from which to select what we think fit. We have opportunities under the elective system which the students of no other college have. Yet it seems to me that while we have so many courses on so many subjects there is one great deficiency; that one of the most important subjects has been left...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications. | 11/30/1887 | See Source »

...their life work,- how many of them have any proper knowledge of physiology? None. Doubtless a few of the athletic men know something about hygiene as far as training is concerned; and I believe we have had a few things called emergency lectures in times past. But I think that every man should have the chance to take one good thorough course in physiology before he leaves college. This matter is something that affects every man. One of England's greatest philosophers of to day places this kind of knowledge as the most fundamental and important of all. It should...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications. | 11/30/1887 | See Source »

...wish to call attention to the statement from the 'Varsity team on our first page which we think will commend itself to all men here, at Yale, or anywhere else. Harvard and Harvard men have had no part in the newspaper statements of the last two or three days, nearly all of which were written by men so ignorant of the matter that they even imagined the referee to have been Mr. Cook, and the umpire Mr. Hancock! These misstatements have made necessary this declaration of the 'Varsity's intentions which we print...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/29/1887 | See Source »

...students were very "immoral and disorderly," and vigorous measures had to be resorted to by the faculty. The practice of "unsuitable and unseasonable dancing" crept into the college to the great sorrow of the "honorable governors." In spite of all that is said, we cannot think the students of those days so bad as they are reported, for one must consider the sentiments of the time in which these reports were written. The Puritan fathers who held the reins of the college could not bear any departure from their ideas of gravity and decorum. All the students in those days...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Student Life at Harvard in 1675 | 11/29/1887 | See Source »

...HOPKINSON, Sec.SENIORS are requested to sign to day for the class dinner. There should be at least a hundred men present. All can afford to go if they will but think...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Notices. | 11/28/1887 | See Source »